{"id":3803,"date":"1972-01-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1972-01-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/january-1972-vol-53-no-1-put-it-in-writing\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T00:43:37","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T00:43:37","slug":"january-1972-vol-53-no-1-put-it-in-writing","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/january-1972-vol-53-no-1-put-it-in-writing\/","title":{"rendered":"January 1972 &#8211; VOL. 53, No. 1 &#8211; Put It In Writing"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">It would be ridiculous to expect everyone                     in these days to remember everything he had to do, to recall                     what was said last week at a conference, to keep in mind his                     engagements for meetings and parties, and to know by heart                     the answers to all the questions that come up in business,                     the community and the home.<\/p>\n<p> &#8220;Write it down&#8221; is not a drab, irrelevant lesson, but one                     essential to everyone. It is necessary to both efficient living                     and peace of mind.<\/p>\n<p>There is never an hour in a business office when a worker                     is not listening to or giving instructions, interviewing or                     being interviewed, thinking through a problem to solution                     or digging up information. What a comfort it is to have notes                     that make recollection sure and finding information easy.                     Solving a problem is simple when you have all the factors                     in front of you.<\/p>\n<p>People like to have things in written form. Your doctor                     and your dentist give you chits saying: &#8220;Your appointment                     is for&nbsp;&#8230; day, date, time.&#8221; The newspaper confirms what                     you heard on radio or television or at a meeting. The written                     report gives you time to think about the points, consider                     the worth of what was said, and appraise the speech in terms                     of your own thinking.<\/p>\n<p>Notes written down either as reminders of things to do or                     to refresh your memory about past things form a sort of chain,                     every note being a link. In the comprehensive book (600 pages)                     called <em>Secretarial Efficiency <\/em>(McGraw-Hill 1939),                     Faunce and Nichols devote a chapter to &#8220;Please Put It in Writing.&#8221;                     They say: &#8220;If you look through the active papers, including                     specific memorandums, and the filing basket and the shorthand                     notebook on the desk of a secretary today, you will find one                     link after another, each related to its own special chain.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Ice age to nuclear age<\/h3>\n<p>People in olden times had no card indexes, file folders,                     notebooks or pencils. Nevertheless, they made records of their                     doings, their contracts, their obligations and the links in                     their chain of life.<\/p>\n<p>There were paintings on the walls and ceilings of caves                     in the French Pyrenees, done twenty thousand years ago by                     men and women trying to survive the last Ice Age. Archaeologists                     found clay tablets inscribed in cuneiform writing in the Nineveh                     of three thousand years ago giving account of commercial transactions                     and everyday affairs. Carved picture writing on a sandstone                     cliff in the valley of the Milk River, Alberta, tells about                     men hunting and fighting. All of these were the notes made                     by people who observed what was going on around them and put                     it on record.<\/p>\n<p>Our advanced techniques in writing, typewriting, teletyping,                     printing and photography encourage us to put into black and                     white the most intricate thoughts and transactions. We know                     that what we put on paper can be carefully considered, discussed,                     and kept for reference.<\/p>\n<p>Winston Churchill declared: &#8220;I am a strong believer in transacting                     official business by <em>The Written Word<\/em>.&#8221; On July 19,                     1940, he issued a minute to the Chief of the Imperial General                     Staff: &#8220;Let it be very clearly understood that all directions                     emanating from me are made in writing, or should be immediately                     afterwards confirmed in writing, and that I do not accept                     any responsibility for matters relating to national defence                     on which I am alleged to have given decisions, unless they                     are recorded in writing.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Notes from the past provide the guidelines for action today.                     They are important to ensure accuracy of recall and to help                     in proper follow-through. Orders and instructions in writing                     tell how a piece of work should be done; reports in writing                     tell how it has been done; together they provide guidance                     for future jobs of the same kind.<\/p>\n<p>The habit of making notes contributes to invention and initiative.                     Says Alex Osborn, whose textbook <em>Applied Imagination <\/em>is                     widely used in universities: &#8220;Millions of dollars worth of                     valuable ideas have been lost because of the want of a stub                     pencil and a scrap of paper.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Written versus spoken<\/h3>\n<p>Every mode of communication has its place, and worship of                     one should not be carried to extremes.<\/p>\n<p>A face-to-face conference is the most satisfying form of                     communication in many areas of business and private life.                     It is quick, pleasant and effective. Oral debate in groups                     allows the exchange of suggestions, the examination of ideas,                     and the settling of policies. Conversation gives an opportunity                     for one person to influence the thinking of another by the                     force of his personality.<\/p>\n<p>These things being admitted, it remains to consider some                     of the pitfalls and hindrances encountered when things spoken                     are not put into writing. Careful as you may be in an oral                     conference to make your meaning clear, there is danger of                     misunderstanding. Your words may be the right words and your                     sentences crystal clear, but the meaning of what you say may                     not communicate itself exactly.<\/p>\n<p>A person&#8217;s notes about a conversation not communicated to                     another in writing at the time are not of themselves determining                     legal evidence, but they go a long way toward establishing                     what the maker understood of the matter at the time.<\/p>\n<p>Trusting to memory will result in your mind becoming overloaded                     with trivialities which smother the important things.<\/p>\n<p>Dr. Hans Selye, eminent scientist and author of a revolutionary                     concept of stress, wrote in <em>The Stress of Life <\/em>(McGraw-Hill                     1956): &#8220;There is a limit to how much you can burden your memory;                     and trying to remember too many things is certainly one of                     the major sources of psychologic stress. I make a conscious                     effort to forget immediately all that is unimportant and to                     jot down data of possible value (even at the price of having                     to prepare complex files.) Thus I manage to keep my memory                     free for facts which are truly essential to me.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Nowhere is note-making more important than in dealing with                     business duties and obligations by telephone. The facts touched                     upon should be written down as the conversation proceeds.<\/p>\n<h3>Clear thinking<\/h3>\n<p>Notes help toward precision of thought. Writing things down                     concentrates your mind and helps toward solving problems.                     You bring related notes together and brush aside all others.                     Here, in this collection of notes, is what you need for the                     job in hand, the facts and your past thinking about the facts.                     Now you put them together in a way relevant to the present                     situation.<\/p>\n<p>Think of the assurance and poise with which you weigh two                     competing ideas on two notes compared with the confusion and                     worry associated with having planets, stars and atoms of ideas                     circling confusingly in your head. You avoid the panic of                     making hasty decisions with nebulous data.<\/p>\n<p>It goes without saying that when you put instructions to                     others on paper they are less likely to become garbled in                     transmission or interpretation. You prevent misunderstanding.<\/p>\n<h3>Letters and memos<\/h3>\n<p>When you write or dictate a letter you have the opportunity                     to read it and to make sure that it conveys your meaning precisely,                     that it is accurate, and that it is couched in terms likely                     to attain your objective. Your letter gives the recipient,                     too, an opportunity to consider, analyse and weigh.<\/p>\n<p>When approaching the preparation of an important letter                     or form ( like an application for a job or your income tax                     report ) it is wise to write a rough draft. This gives you                     a chance to have second thoughts about both your statement                     of facts and your manner of stating them.<\/p>\n<p>A memorandum is an informal note that embodies something                     the parties desire to fix in memory by the aid of written                     evidence, or that is to serve as the basis of a future contract                     or other agreement. That is the law book definition.<\/p>\n<p>Most of us think of a memo as something much less pretentious.                     There was a newspaper city editor who dictated memos to himself                     about coming events. His secretary filed these in a date file                     (a folder for every day) and laid them on his desk at the                     appropriate time.<\/p>\n<h3>To save time<\/h3>\n<p>A memorandum written to another person is a time-saver.                     In a company that does not use the memo system you see line-ups                     outside the offices of supervisors, managers and executives                     ( line-ups of people waiting in idleness to get in to discuss                     plans or get rulings or obtain the solutions of problems).                     Where the memo system is used these people present their                    cases  in concise written form: the boss reads the memos                    in between  other chores, calls in the writer for discussion                    or for further  information, or writes his decision on the                    memo and returns  it. This works smoothly without interrupting                    a conference  or a train of thought or the dictating of a                    letter. It saves  time, because it is speedier to read and                    assess and answer  a memo than to talk with someone.<\/p>\n<p>Memoranda should contain enough information so that they                     make sense at the time they are re-read, perhaps months after                     they were written. A memo is not the place for fine writing                     or jingling phrases or emotional outbursts. It is a really                     down-to-earth piece of composition in which you say clearly                     what you have to say and then stop.<\/p>\n<p>Some people make it a point to write reports about projects                     and conferences as if they were giving an account to other                     people, and then file the reports to keep things straight                     in their own minds. Others keep a running account of a project                     from its inception to its completion.<\/p>\n<h3>The use of written records<\/h3>\n<p>Modern business demands more and more conferences and meetings.                     A business man may have three or four in a day. The only way                     he can keep his balance and contribute his share to discussion                     is by making notes. When a conference is called, whether in                     a factory, an office or a home, be prepared with notes of                     the points you wish to discuss and the suggestions you wish                     to contribute. Then keep notes at the meeting so that you                     come away with an accurate account of what was decided.<\/p>\n<p>Notes are splendid things for anticipating needs and projects.                     They organize foresight, one of the most precious possessions                     of the ongoing person. They prompt your subconscious mind                     to work on problems before they become acute. If you have                     a dozen notes about various facets of a developing situation                     you have won half the battle. All you need do is spread the                     notes on your desk, evaluate the relative worth and practicality                     of the ideas, and select a plan of operation.<\/p>\n<p>The making of notes is an activity that helps greatly in                     laying out plans and organizing your life. <em>The Secretarial                     Manual <\/em>of this bank suggests a &#8220;Desk Job Work Plan&#8221; as                     a useful guide. &#8220;Catalogue every duty and keep a day-by-day                     running account for a few weeks. Then set up captioned sheets:                     Routine duties, daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly, semi-annual                     and annual duties. Opposite each duty list HOW and WHY and                     WHEN.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>This procedure automatizes routine and leaves your mind                     free to pursue other knowledge and activities.<\/p>\n<p>When an idea comes to you for some improvement of workshop,                     office, or home operations you should write it down, together                     with a note of the purpose. Not only are you reminded of the                     need, but you give an indication of what improvement may be                     expected in the way of more efficient work, saved time, and                     elimination of needless labour.<\/p>\n<p>Making notes is a great aid when you are asked for information.                     Write down what is wanted, making sure that you learn exactly                     what you are to look for. The people most plagued by vague                     requests are librarians. Someone writes a note or telephones                     asking for something about ( let us say ) insurance. The                    library  has scores of books on dozens of aspects of insurance                    and  the librarian has no crystal ball to reveal exactly                    what phase  of insurance interests the inquirer. When you                    insist upon  particularity when making your note of what                    is wanted you  save time and avoid frustration.<\/p>\n<p>The importance of putting agreements into writing cannot                     be overemphasized. In every deal that is made between people                     an element of contract is involved. A contract is defined                     in law: &#8220;An agreement upon sufficient consideration, to do                     or not to do a particular thing.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>It is quite practical, in most transactions of everyday                     life, to deal with a person or firm without a formal written                     document, but the careful person will make sure that important                     agreements and expensive obligations are put into writing                     for his protection.<\/p>\n<p>When contracting for any service or goods, get the terms                     clear and write them down. The detail should include quantity,                     quality, delivery date, total price and terms of payment.                     If the agreement is for service spread over a period, differentiate                     between a calendar month and a four-week month. The snow cleaner                     may charge $25 a month, meaning a calendar month, while the                     boy who mows the lawn may charge $25 a month, meaning four                     weeks. It is getting such details as this accurately in writing                     that saves headaches and disputes.<\/p>\n<p>In every oral deal that is important to you, whether made                     face to face or by telephone, the safe rule when there is                     no formal contract is: write immediately to confirm it. When                     you confirm an agreement, an offer, or an order in writing                     you leave no room for misunderstanding.<\/p>\n<h3>Many uses for notes<\/h3>\n<p>Having notes pertaining to things to be done saves you from                     the self-deceiving device of dawdling over pleasing jobs so                     as to banish thought of the more important but not so easy                     jobs. Sorting the slips into order of importance will ensure                     that first things come first.<\/p>\n<p>Everyone is in a working world, and our work must get done.                     This includes not only what a person does at a bench in the                     factory or at a desk in the office, or in the kitchen. There                     are dozens of calls made upon us in social and community life                     to do things that are outside our work-for-bread, entertaining,                     for example.<\/p>\n<p>Lists of names and addresses of persons most frequently                     communicated with in these activities may be kept in several                     forms: on cards filed alphabetically (a recipe box and 5&#8243;                     x 3&#8243; cards are ideal for the home or desk); in a notebook                     with an alphabetical index; or on a sheet of durable paper                     tacked on a wall or bulletin board.<\/p>\n<p>Making notes of purchases and costs is a lifesaving practice                     in making ends meet. It is particularly needed when buying                     on credit, even monthly credit. A list of proposed purchases                     makes shopping easier and safer budget-wise. It brings together                     related objects according to the business of the supplier:                     groceries, building supplies, furniture, etc. It breaks down                     the grocery list into departments, thus saving steps and time.                     It keeps track of financial obligations.<\/p>\n<h3>Collecting ideas<\/h3>\n<p>You may have quick thought, but thinking needs facts with                     which to work, to build ideas, and to meet crises. These facts                     must be in such a form as to be recallable when wanted, and                     note-making is the only way to make sure that you have the                     information readily at hand.<\/p>\n<p>Much that is useful is to be found in books, and the mark                     of a true student is note-making.<\/p>\n<p>Make a note of anything you come upon in a book or other                     publication that might be useful in some future situation.                     One may keep notes because he is planning to write a novel,                     or an autobiography, or a family history, or the story of                     a corporation, or a play or a poem.<\/p>\n<p>When Anatole France ( called the greatest master of prose                     in his generation ) came to write his <em>Life of Joan of                      Arc<\/em>, his secretary says that France opened a clothes                       press and dragged out a mattress cover stuffed to bulging                       and fastened with safety pins. As he loosened the pins,                      a  deluge of paper scraps spilled over the floor. There                      were  thousands of notes scrawled on backs of envelopes,                      pages torn  from notebooks and theatre programmes, and                      clippings from  newspapers and magazines. He captured ideas                      while out walking  in the Bois de Boulogne, sitting in                      the theatre or a railway  train, or when he woke in the                      night.<\/p>\n<p>Keeping notes of interesting things heard and read may lead                     to publication of an anthology. C. F. Kleinknecht of Washington                     set himself to bring together a storehouse of &#8220;Gems of Thought&#8221;,                     and he published volume 28 in 1970.<\/p>\n<p>Leonard E. Read, President of the Foundation for Economic                     Education Inc., author of several books, wrote to the <em>Monthly                     Letter<\/em>: &#8220;I made a resolution to keep a daily journal                     into which I would write any good ideas given me by others                     or any that I might come upon by myself. It will be 18 years                     next month, and I haven&#8217;t missed a day. At first this was                     extremely difficult, but within a year or two it became a                     joy.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Michel Montaigne, born in 1533, was a man of insatiable                     intellectual curiosity. In 1580 he published a book of essays                     ( the first essays ever written ) and it is still being                    reprinted.  The point relevant to this <em>Letter <\/em>is:                    Montaigne quoted  copiously, therefore he must have noted                    assiduously. He wrote:                     &#8220;Anyone who would like to know the sources of the verses                    and  examples I have piled up here would put me to great                    trouble  to tell him&#8230;.I gather the flowers by the wayside,                    by the  brooks and in the meadows, and only the string with                    which  I bind them together is my own.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Making and finding notes<\/h3>\n<p>A calendar pad on which you write things to be done and                     promises to be kept is next in importance to your clock in                     organizing efficient use of your time. Some people find a                     wall calendar handy if it has space for writing beside every                     date.<\/p>\n<p>Some items of business and personal finance come up at regular                     intervals: annually, quarterly, monthly. A perpetual diary                     is handy for keeping track of them. This diary has the months                     and dates printed, but not the years or days of the week.                     You enter items to be attended to on certain dates: pay insurance                     premiums, give a birthday present or send an anniversary card;                     review staff salaries; order winter fuel, and a hundred other                     recurring items.<\/p>\n<p>Everything written should be dated. There is nothing more                     irritating than a missing date, whether it be absent from                     a memo or the back of a photograph.<\/p>\n<p>It is a good habit to have paper or cards always handy on                     which to write a note about something that turns up in your                     mind or something you see. Hunches come in all sizes and at                     all hours of the day and night.<\/p>\n<p>Many people ( and not only poets ) sleep with a pad of                    paper  and a pencil on their bedside tables. The man who                    thought  up the idea of making landing mats which could be                    used to  construct airfields overnight said to Alex Osborn                    (who tells  the story in <em>The Gold Mine Between Your Ears<\/em>): &#8220;The                     bed, the bedside pad and pencil, are great aids to thinking                     up ideas. Only last night I scrawled over four sheets of                    paper  in the pitch dark  notes that could be solutions                    to a current  problem.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>File cards are the handiest tools of the note-maker. They                     can be carried in jacket pocket or purse. They can be arranged                     alphabetically or by subject and kept in any container from                     a shoe box to a mahogany desk tray.<\/p>\n<p>Orderliness is a big help toward finding references. Instead                     of keeping notes and memos in a mattress cover as Anatole                     France did, or having them jumbled in a drawer, assign a place                     where you can keep them in easily accessible form.<\/p>\n<p>Some people prefer scrap-books in which notes about related                     topics are written or pasted in sections separated by division                     sheets with projecting index tabs. A doctor had a library                     in which most of the books were straining in their bindings.                     He did not file articles torn from professional magazines,                     but folded them and inserted them in the textbooks dealing                     with the same subjects. He adopted this method, he said, because                     it provided him in one cover with the basic principles and                     the latest developments in treatment of disease.<\/p>\n<h3>Self-improvement<\/h3>\n<p>One of the greatest benefits of note-making is the stimulation                     it gives toward self-improvement.<\/p>\n<p>Did you ever think of the time wasted while waiting ( waiting                     for a bus or a train, waiting for someone who is late in                    keeping  an appointment, waiting for dinner, waiting for                    a television  programme, waiting for your partner to get                    ready for an evening  out)? Every such period is an opportunity                    to think and to record  your thoughts on those pocket cards                    you carry.<\/p>\n<p>The notes may be about &#8220;tricks of the trade&#8221;, or items you                     saw in the newspaper about developments in your line of business,                     or the name of a book you heard mentioned, or an idea for                     self-improvement arising from your observation of someone,                     or a note may put on record one of those fleeting inspirational                     ideas that defeat your memory when you try to recall it.<\/p>\n<p>Everyone can benefit by becoming an ardent observer of what                     is going on around him and then making notes. This keeps him                     in touch with life. It is a way to make sure of being up to                     date. It gives him a young, alive, feeling.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[52],"class_list":["post-3803","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-52"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>January 1972 - VOL. 53, No. 1 - Put It In Writing - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/january-1972-vol-53-no-1-put-it-in-writing\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"January 1972 - VOL. 53, No. 1 - Put It In 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